Gare de l’Est in the shadow of its bigger sister

Paris Gare de l’Est is the little sister of Gare du Nord. In fact, the two stations with their imposing façades are located just 500m apart in the 10th arrondissement. The Gare de l’Est sits at the end of one of the long straight boulevards Baron Haussmann cut through the city, the Boulevard de Sébastopol which turns into Boulevard de Strasbourg. Fun fact: The train station was initially called Gare de Strasbourg.

Its style is neoclassical, with some parts being Art Deco, notably the glass-roofed departure-arrivals hall. Note the beautiful half-circle rose window on the main façade.

Like all the other Paris train stations, the Gare de l’Est is a terminus station. Being the 5th-busiest of the six main stations, from Gare de l’Est trains go to–you guessed it–Strasbourg, which these days is served by the high-speed TGV Est on its way to Frankfurt, but also the rest of North-Eastern France (Champagne-Ardennes, Lorraine, Alsace), Luxembourg, the southern parts of Germany (for the North, go to Gare du Nord), Austria, and even Italy, as well as local trains (TER) serving the eastern part of the greater Paris area. In 1883, the first-ever Orient Express train to Istanbul made its departure from Gare de l’Est

The Gare de l’Est can be reached by bus and métro (4, 5, and 7). From Gare du Nord, you can walk or take the métro 4 (one station) which serves both stations.

The Gare de l’Est has featured in numerous French movies, sometimes standing in for other stations as it is less busy. One you might know is Amélie (2001).

Below the tracks 2 and 3, there is a bunker from WWII that was in fact begun not long before the war and completed by the Occupant in 1941. It is, however, not open to the public.

Gare de l’Est on a map of Paris
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Lyon Station in Paris

When the train station sign says „Gare de Lyon“, you’re not in Lyon. If you were, you’d read either Lyon Perrache or Lyon Part-Dieu. But Gare de Lyon means you’re in Paris.

Hall 1

So, welcome to the second-biggest Paris train station after Gare du Nord. Gare de Lyon has two main halls, Hall 1 and Hall 2, with platforms named A, (no B), C, D… in Hall 1 and numbered starting with 13 in Hall 2.

Platforms in Hall 1 – the B is missing
Hall 2 – numbered platforms on the left

The Gare de Lyon is, like all other train stations in Paris, a terminus. Its high-speed trains (TGV) serve the southeast of France, the Mediterranean coast, and the neighboring countries: Spain, Switzerland, and Italy. Regional trains (Transilien) serve the southeast of the greater Paris area, and two RER lines run below the station, RER A and RER D, as well as the metro lines 1 and 14.

Located on the upper floor, the legendary Second Empire-style restaurant Le Train Bleu is a listed historical monument.

Gare de Lyon serves Switzerland with the TGV Lyria trains

The Gare de Lyon is located in the 12th arrondissement, and you can reach its nearest neighbor, the Gare d’Austerlitz (change here for trains to Orléans, Bordeaux, Toulouse, and Nantes), on foot by crossing the Seine on the Charles de Gaulle bridge (approximately 10 minutes’ walk).

Gare de Lyon train station in the 12th arrondissement

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